NameElisabeth Dorothea Christine Streese
Birthabt 23 Apr 1819, Petersberg, Mecklenburg, Germany
DeathUnited States of America
Spouses
Birth3 May 1814, Ganzow, Mecklenburg, Germany
Baptism5 May 1814, St. Jacob and St. Dionysius Evangelical Lutheran Church, Gadebusch, Mecklenburg
DeathUnited States of America
OccupationArbeitman (workman)
FatherHans Jochim Koehn (~1780-)
MotherAnna Elsabe Olrig (~1780-)
Marriage12 Feb 1858, Evangelical Lutheran Church, Pokrent, Mecklenburg, Germany
ChildrenJohann Jochim Heinrich (1860-1861)
Notes for Elisabeth Dorothea Christine Streese
Source: Records of the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Pokrent, Mecklenburg.
She was living in Neuendorf when she married in 1858.
The notice of her marriage gave her name as Liesch Trien Dorothea Hanna Streese. The death notice for her son gave her name as Elisabeth Dorothea Christine Streese.
Notes for Hans Jochim Ludwig (Spouse 1)
Source of the information about his life before he married: Records of the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Gadebusch, Mecklenburg. Source of the information from the time of his first marriage to when he emigrated: Records of the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Pokrent, Germany.
His baptismal sponsors were Detloff Ludwig Buhr, Hans Christian Koerner, and [his uncle] Jochen Heinrich Koehn, all workmen from Ganzow.
He was confirmed in 1828 in Gadebusch.
At the time of his marriage in 1837 he was described as a day laborer in Alt Pokrent who lived in Niendorf [Neuendorf].
When his daughter Catharina Maria Elisabeth was born in 1848, he was described as a day laborer from Schlagfort.
He was a baptismal sponsor in 1859 for Hans Jochim Heinrich Koch, the son of his stepdaughter Catharine Maria Dorothea Koch of Neuendorf.
His marriage in 1858 required a dispensation that was received from Schwerin on 8 February 1858.
He and his second wife emigrated to the United States leaving from Hamburg on the "Prinz Albert" on Nov. 1 or 2, 1862, and arriving in New York on Dec. 29, 1862. The record of the ship’s arrival in New York is missing from the microfilm at the National Archives in Washington, DC.
Last Modified 8 Sep 2014Created 29 Jun 2016 using Reunion for Macintosh